February 18, 2020
| Rebecca Hersman, Reja YounisIn On the RadarInformation dominance has been essential to ensuring U.S. military effectiveness, sustaining the credibility and assurance of military alliances, and reducing the risk of miscalculation. But can there be too much of a good thing?

There is a tendency to cheer the role that gas has played in reducing coal use, but that might oversimplify the forces at play. Gas is playing a role in reducing coal consumption in Europe, but that role is neither simple nor straightforward.

February 12, 2020
| John SchausThe Philippines has notified the United States of its intent to withdraw from the Visiting Forces Agreement. What does it do, and what will the United States and the Philippines lose if the agreement ends?

February 12, 2020
| Nikos TsafosCommodities go through cycles, but the current gas glut feels different. There is too much gas in the market, yet there is also record investment in new supply for liquefied natural gas. What exactly is happening and how might it play out?

February 12, 2020
| Jack CaporalWith the election season heating up, the Scholl Chair analyzes former vice president Joe Biden’s views on trade and where he stands compared to the other major candidates.

February 12, 2020
| Gordon de BrouwerGordon de Brouwer argues that public policy should advance all three components of the national interest—security, prosperity, and social wellbeing—rather than treating them as competing alternatives.

February 12, 2020In Reconnecting AsiaEuropean firms seeking to participate in China's Belt and Road Initiative face rising hurdles while Chinese state-owned companies are successfully pricing out their European competitors. As European leaders gear up for several high-profile meetings with Beijing in the coming...